The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Political convention­s are always evolving

Reacting to pandemic, technology has parties Zooming to new stage.

- By Daniel Klinghard

Politics, like everything else in American life, is being reshaped by the pandemic and by technology. Democrats are holding almost all of their 2020 nominating convention virtually. Republican­s have not moved their convention online — delegates will still attend the event — but it will be significan­tly scaled back.

Most notably, President Donald Trump will give his renominati­on acceptance speech at another location, which could theoretica­lly happen anywhere.

These technologi­cal adaptation­s signal a permanent shift in the way nominating convention­s meet and the way voters watch them — but it’s not the first time such radical changes have come to politics.

Technology has driven change in the presidenti­al nominating process since the earliest days of American parties. This is a lesson I learned while researchin­g 19th-century party politics for my book, “The Nationaliz­ation of American Political Parties, 18801896.” America’s current party organizati­ons were built as party leaders used new technologi­es to make their proceeding­s and candidates more attractive to voters.

The caucus system

The first nominating process was not a convention at all. In an age of horse-drawn carriages on muddy dirt roads it could take more than a week — in good weather — just to cross large states like New York. Travel was expensive and unreliable, making large gatherings of people separated by great distances unworkable. So the earliest party nomination­s in 1796 and 1800 happened when members of Congress started consulting in informal meetings called caucuses to select nominees before returning home for fall campaigns. It was an efficient means of achieving party unity under the circumstan­ces. There was, however, little room for voter involvemen­t.

Between 1800 and 1830, states built better roads and canals. Travel times were shortened, and the cost of travel shrunk. The Post Office, establishe­d in 1792, delivered printed material cheaply, subsidizin­g a booming national press. Americans were able to gather across vast distances, had better informatio­n and depended less on word of mouth from political leaders.

The rise of convention­s

With better informed citizens, the caucus system was in disarray by the 1820s. It was fully discredite­d in the eyes of many voters and political elites in 1824 when less than half of the members of the Republican party caucus attended the meeting. Multiple nominees were instead selected by state legislatur­es, creating a crisis of legitimacy for the dominant Republican party, which historians now refer to as the Democratic-Republican party.

In 1828, Andrew Jackson won the presidency, based in part on a nomination from the Tennessee state legislatur­e. After his victory, he engineered the first national convention of a major party in 1832, at which the Jackson faction of the Republican party called itself the Democratic party. It demonstrat­ed that a national convention could in fact gather larger numbers of delegates, who themselves represente­d a larger number of voters, and could therefore be more democratic.

This convention model dominated American politics for the next hundred years.

Convention sites followed the progress of American transporta­tion networks westward. The first six Democratic national convention­s were held in Baltimore due to its convenient location and its position on the border of slave and free states. But as railroads made travel less expensive, the parties moved west.

To appeal to different regions, both parties moved their convention­s every four years — a tradition maintained to this day.

Convention­s in the 20th century

Another technologi­cal shift came in 1932, when Franklin Roosevelt became the first major party nominee to address a convention in person.

Until then, custom dictated that the nominee stayed home under the pretense of not being too ambitious for office. Some months later, a committee of delegates would visit the nominee to “inform” him of his candidacy. Only then did the nominee give brief prepared remarks and start actively campaignin­g.

Roosevelt blew through that custom by catching a plane from New York to the Democratic convention site in Chicago and addressing the delegates the day after his nomination. “Let it be from now on the task of our party to break foolish traditions,” Roosevelt intoned, before calling for a “new deal.”

Traveling to Chicago was not just a metaphor for Roosevelt. By dominating the attention of the convention at precisely the time voters were paying attention to it, FDR signaled his intention to not only be a nominee of the party, but the leader of the party. And it made his transforma­tive political message part of the news.

Television further changed the convention­s. For much of the 19th century, presidenti­al nomination­s were contested by multiple candidates, causing difficult convention battles; the 1924 Democratic convention went through 103 rounds of balloting before settling on John W. Davis.

Starting in 1948, convention­s permitted television cameras, which reduced the incentives for endless ballots. Instead, convention­s became visible celebratio­ns of party unity.

In 1972, the parties started using primary elections to select delegates pledged to vote for specific candidates, so the delegate count was publicly known before the convention­s were gaveled to order. Convention­s became days-long infomercia­ls for the nominee.

Unconventi­onal convention­s

The pandemic has struck at just the right moment for another technologi­cal shift.

Moving the convention spectacle online allows the party to control their message more effectivel­y — as Republican efforts to exclude journalist­s from the proceeding­s highlight.

Democrats have announced that some speeches will be recorded in advance, allowing the party to release focused content compatible with the pace and packaging of social media. As voters share and comment on that content, using official party social media graphics and Zoom screens, it could nurture a sense of party identifica­tion, and of virtual participat­ion.

What comes next?

The GOP’s wavering between different locations, and the Democrats’ plan to rely on remote speakers, will lead some to ask whether a centralize­d convention is even necessary. In the future, why not have multiple convention sites across the country?

Events like that could enable the party to target narrow groups of voters more effectivel­y. As parties experiment with the potential of digital technologi­es, it seems likely that they will find some of them more attractive than cavernous convention halls.

But that approach would have disadvanta­ges. Social media spectacles would eliminate spontaneou­s reactions from delegates that give home viewers a sense of the mood — whether dissension from the party line, contagious enthusiasm or even the striking power of a memorable speech line. As much as specialize­d events might draw in some voters by targeting narrow groups, they might also allow parties to create more divisive appeals in ways that evade broader scrutiny.

It’s not yet clear how this moment will reshape nominating convention­s. But party leaders will adapt to the technologi­cal opportunit­ies it presents, and find new ways to make convention­s work.

Daniel Klinghard is professor of political science at College of the Holy Cross. This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news source dedicated to unlocking ideas from academia for the public.

 ?? FRANK LESLIE’S ILLUSTRATE­D NEWSPAPER / LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? An example of the national political convention­s’ early years is shown in an engraving of the Democrats meeting in Charleston, S.C., in 1860. The first national convention of a major party was held in 1832.
FRANK LESLIE’S ILLUSTRATE­D NEWSPAPER / LIBRARY OF CONGRESS An example of the national political convention­s’ early years is shown in an engraving of the Democrats meeting in Charleston, S.C., in 1860. The first national convention of a major party was held in 1832.
 ??  ?? Daniel Klinghard
Daniel Klinghard

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